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[VN
Boards Archive] |
Welcome to the Vault Network
forum archive.
This is not a complete archive, time didn't allot us the
opportunity to properly backup the majority of the boards
deemed "expendable". Most boards on this list have at least
20-40 pages archived (non-logged in pages, 15 topics per
page).
Popular boards may have as many as 250 pages archived at 50
topics per page, while others deemed of historical
signifigance may be archived in their entirety.
We may not agree with how the board shutdown was managed, but
we've done what we could to preserve some of its history in
lieu of that.
Please enjoy the archive.
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Managers, Moderators, VIP's, and regular posters.
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Author |
Topic: Former Cowboys assistant Avezzano dies
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-Foxy-
Title: Moderator Ãœber Brat
Posts:
110,094
Registered:
May 29, '02
Extended Info (if available)
Real Post Cnt: 107,357
User ID: 683,944
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Subject:
Former Cowboys assistant Avezzano dies
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http://tiny.cc/2ycbcw As a Cowboys special-teams coach, Joe Avezzano was known for his fiery demeanor on the sideline. April 5, 2012 Former Dallas Cowboys assistant coach Joe Avezzano died Thursday of cardiac failure in Italy, the NFL team confirmed. Avezzano, 68, died after suffering cardiac failure while running on a treadmill. Avezzano was in Italy to coach the Milano Seamen of the Italian Football League. Avezzano, who played for the Boston Patriots of the American Football League in 1966, joined the Dallas Cowboys coaching staff in 1990 as special-teams coach. Avezzano's fiery emotion on the sideline made him a fan favorite in Dallas, where he was a part of the Cowboys' three Super Bowl championships in the 1990s. He was the only three-time winner of the NFL Special Teams Coach of the Year award. After being fired by the team when Bill Parcells was hired in 2003, Avezzano would continue his coaching career, joining the Oakland Raiders as special-teams coach (2003-05) under Norv Turner, a former Cowboys offensive coordinator. Avezzano was a presence in Dallas off the field, too, having opened Coach Joe's Bar and Grill in Frisco, Texas. He also served as a judge on former Cowboys wide receiver Michael Irvin's short-lived reality-television show, "Fourth and Long," on Spike TV. awesome coach
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Long suffering vassal to Xarkath, U.P. - Forever and ever
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